Not Enough Information Interview Tip

I was listening to a radio interview recently in which the guest made a point by recounting a conversation she’s had with her teenage son. She concluded by saying, “That was T-M-I.”

The host’s next question was, “What do you mean by T-M-I? That can mean a lot of things.”

Now, the host may have known this shorthand term for “too much information,” but a good interviewer never assumes that their audience knows. I’d say most acronyms, other than the most familiar ones like F-Y-I, the CIA or the U-N, should be stated in full the first time, before you start using their abbreviated form.

For example, the E-U has been around quite awhile, but Americans don’t talk about the European Union much. Those letters could stand for different things in different places. If a listener has to mentally pause to think, “What do those letters mean?” for even a moment, they’ve tuned out and you may not get their attention back.